London indie pop trio Flowers formed in the time-honored tradition of bored roommates making music in their living room, inspired equally by the canon of melancholic fuzz pop that came before them and a lack of anything much else to do. If you're listening for them, these insular, housebound beginnings can be heard in Flowers' debut
Do What You Want To, It's What You Should Do. The album smacks of newfound possibility, and sounds very much created in a bubble, despite production from veteran producer
Bernard Butler. Across the album, Flowers wear their influences on their sleeves, channeling the minimalism of
Young Marble Giants on tracks like album-closer "Stuck" as well as the dark, fuzzy wistfulness of noise pop bands like
Black Tambourine or Henry's Dress on tunes like "Young" and the bouncy "Lonely." There are even hints of twee pop à la early K Records artists like
Beat Happening or
Lois in the simplistic chord changes and woozy melodies of "All Over Again." These reference points are offset by vocalist/bassist Rachel Kenedy's ethereal, cloudy vocals. The dreamy otherworldliness of Kenedy's voice transforms even the tunes that border on upbeat scrappiness into lush dream pop. Standout track "Forget the Fall" shows what happens when all of these strange elements come together in one fantastically paced pop tune. ~ Fred Thomas